DRIVESAFELY! fT^l \\ J 11 - • The W aliace Enterprise „ _ ___' » Bright Leaf Tobacco Mart __A Duplin County Institution VOLUME XXXIV—Number 64 WALLACE. NORTH CAROLINATHURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1955 PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY PRICE 5 CENTS HARVEY ARNOLD EMERGES AS VICTOR IN BIG DUPLIN ASC VOTE BALLOTING TODAY Everything Set For Wallace’s Halloween Fete A number of additional amuse ments and features have been an nounced for this year’s Halloween Carnival to be held at the Wallace High School, sponsored by the Wal lace PTA, on Monday evening, Oc tober 31. The event will get underway at 7:00 p.m. with the crowning of the King and Queen for the Primary Grades, the Grammar Grades and Lthe High School to be the outstand ing highlight of the evening. Each room in school has a king and queen with votes one cent each. The girl and boy having the most votes in each of the three sections will be crowned. This will take place in the auditorium. As a special attraction, featured for the first time this year, a dance will be held in the school gym with music provided by a juke box. This will be undpr the direction of Coach Overman, Mr. Webb, and Miss Daugherty. Ad mission will be charged at the gym door, but those attending the dance will be allowed to come and go as they please, the spokesman dis closed. A turkey raffle, cake walks, an auction, house of horrors, and a fortune telling booth, will be only a few of the attractions at the af fair. Plenty of good things to eat will be available, such as hot dogs, iced soft drinks, home-made candy, etc., the spokesman said. The Halloween fete is an annual affair, sponsored each year by the Parent-Teacher’s Association, with all proceeds to be used in connec , tion with projects right in the ■' I school. Everyone is invited and urged to attend for an evening of fun and y entertainment. Kenansville Town Clerk Resigns Job D H. McKay has tendered his resignation as Town Clerk of Ken ansville and Mrs. Ruth Wells has been appointed to act in his place “until such time as the vacancy can be filled.” Such was the word today from Phil Kretsch, Mayor of the Town of Kenansville. Kretsch, who assumes his duties as Mayor on July 1st, said the town clerk supervises the water depart ment, maintenance and the ceme tery. The Mayor said that McKay’s re signation was submitted to the reg ular meeting of the Board of Com missioners last Thursday night and was accepted unanimously. Mc Kay has held the job of Town Clerk * since about August of 1954. Prior to that he was an office deputy under Sheriff Ralph Miller, a po sition he had held since Miller took over as Sheriff. The temporary Town Clerk is employed in the office of J. Oliver Stokes, a Town Commissioner. $500 Damages Result From 3-Car Smashup Approximately $500 damages re sulted when three cars pancaked together Saturday night about 7 o’clock 7 1-2 miles west of Mag nolia on the Delway highway. Car No. 1 was a 1950 Chevrolet tudor being operated by George B. James of Winston-Salem, colored, 41. It sustained $150 damages. Car No. 2 was a 1952 Ford tudor being operated by Willie S. Sellers, colored, also of Winston-Salem, and was i nthe act of being shown the „ route to Hihghway 421 by Car No. 1. Car No. 3 was a 1952 Chevrolet fordor being operated by Alvin i. Williams, colored, 24, of Route 1, ^ Rose Hill. It sustained $200 dam ages, as did No 2. Corporal T. G. Brooks, investi gating officer, said No. 3 ran into the back of No. 2, knocking it into No. 1. He said the first was stop ping to turn off and pick up another subject and both drivers had given proper hand signals. The driver of No. 3, William;, was charged with following too closely, causing a wreck. Wallace ■ Warsaw Football Contest Expected To Draw Large Crowd Excitement is running high as the football game which will pitt the Wallace Bulldogs against the War saw Tigers nears, scheduled for Friday night in the Wallace Amer ican Legion Park. The Wallace squad is in fairly good shape, Coach Overman re ported today, with the exception of a number of minor bruises. All the Bulldogs are expected to dress for the game with the exception of Deane Hundley who is still out due to injuries received several weeks ago. The Warsaw - Wallace gridiron battle is expected to be one of the most thrilling of the current sea son as the Tigers will be seeking revenge on the locals for the up set last year when the 7-7 tie brou ght the Warsaw team down from the East Central Class A Conference championship slot to the co-cham pion position with LaGrange. Wallace Is now leading the Con ference with Warsaw in third place, LaGrange holding fourth. The only other conference game set for Friday night will see Beula ville travel to Mt. Olive for a con test. The Wallace band is scheduled to perform during half time. A big crowd is expected for the Wallace - Warsaw game as fans from both ball clubs are anxious to see how Coach Bill Taylor’s boys face up to Coach Overman’s single wing Bulldogs. Kickoff time has been set for eight o’clock. Wallace Woman’s Club To Sponsor Unique “Hot Cake Supper” Nov. 11 An unique event in the form of a “Hot Cake Supper” is being plan ned by the Wallace Woman's Club, it was announced today. The supper, which will feature “all the hot cakes you can eat,” will be held at the Wallace Com munity Building on Friday even ing, November 11th, fiom 5un til 8:00 o’clock. Plates will oe 75 cents each. Mrs. W. B. Knowles, Mrs. J. D. Robinson and Miss Helen Hunt make up the committee in charge of the supper. The Pillsbury Pancake Company is putting on the event, the Wallace Woman’s Club spokesman stated, with the company furnishing the ingredients for the pancakes. They will also send a man to do the cooking, as well as the gridles. Coffee and hot chocolate will be served by the Nescafe Company free of charge with the Vermont Maid Syrup Company donating the syrup, and the Pet Milk Company the milk. Butter and sausages will also be served, the spokesman said, but have not been donated as yet, she added. The Wallace Woman’s Club would like to take this opportunity to ex press their sincere appreciation to the N & W Grocery, of Wallace for their he;p in getting this evenc lin ed up, and for their help in contact ing the different firms which are making donations for the supper. All proceeds from the event will go to the Wallace Woman’s Club to be used for the Community Building kitchen project, the spok esman asserted. “Everyone is invited and urged to attend the ‘Hot Cake Supper’,” the sponsoring group’s spokesman said, adding that it promises to be one of the most enjoyable ev ents of the season, and emphasiz ing the fact that those attending can get all the pancakes they can eat. Chief Buying Emphasis In Duplin Is For Food With 26 Cents Of Each Dollar Going Into Grocery Stores Retail Business Of Count/ Amounted To $18,161,000 Last Year, Am Increase Over The $16,949,000 Re corded In 1953; More Lux ury Buying; Buying Is $505 Per Family CARS, FARM MACHINERY SALES SHOW INCREASE General Merchandise Stores Account For 14 Cents Out Of Dollar (Special To The Enterprise) NEW YORK — With incomes of Duplin County residents running at a high level, the questions arise: How much of this money are they spending? Where are they spend ing it and for what? Answers to the questions are con tained in a copyrighted study made by Sales Management of the spend ing habits of people locally and in other parts of the country. Put under the spotlight are each com munity’s purchases of food, autos, general merchandise and the like. In Duplin County most of the earnings in 1954 went into the cash registers of the local retail stores. These expenditures produced retail business in the amount of $18,616, 000 for the year, an increase over the $16,949,000 recorded in 1953. The chief buying emphasis was on food, which took 26 cents of each dollar spent in the local sto res. It was more than families elsewhere in the United States al lotted. The average was 24 cents. In the State of North Carolina it was 22 cents. The volume of such purchases indicates a trend toward more lux urious living. Duplin County’s food bill, in meat markets, grocery sto res, delicatessens and such, came to $4,852,000 in the year, an in crease over the $4,323,000 of the prior year. Divided equally among the local families, this amounted to $50 per family. The local ability to indulge in more and better food is but one facet of an overall improvement in the standard of living. Luxury buying in Duplin County was indicated also in outlets sell ing new and used cars, farm ma chinery and other automotive eq uipment. Such sales ran to $3, 562,000, compared with $3,408,000 the previous year, accounting for another 19 cents of the retail dol lar. Another outlet was in general merchandise stores, including de partment and variety stores. The volume was $2,599,000, amounting to 14 cents. Local sales of furniture, house hold equipment and radio and mu sic supplies were $1,091,000, equal to six cents. Drug store operations came to $564,000, for an additional three cents. Bullpups To Play First Game At LaGrange Friday The Bullpups football team, or ganized recently by Nearl Carlton, eighth grade teacher at Wallace School, will play their first football game of the season on Friday aft ernoon, traveling to LaGrange for a 3:30 contest. LaGrange will re turn the game, coming here for a contest next Friday. Probable starting backfield to morrow afternoon will be Sonny Shelton, LH; A. J. Carr, RH; Jim my King, FB; Edgar Warren, QB, but has not definitely been decided as yet, the Coach disclosed. A group of grammar grade boys weighing over 115 pounds are also working out under the direction of Coach Carlton, and it is hoped that a game may be scheduled for them in the near future. The Bullpups have been practic ing for approximately ten days. Jacksonville Man To Speak Legion Meeting Tuesday John J. Sanderson of Jackson ville, former Grand Chief de Gare of the 40 & 8, will be the featured speaker at the joint meeting of the Wallace American Legion Post No. 156 and the Ladies Auxiliary of the Wallace American Legion Post No. 156, slated for Tuesday evening, No vember 1, at 7:30 o’clock at the American Legion Home. Heard on previous occasions by several members of the local post, Mr. Sanderson is reported to be an excellent speaker and it is felt that those attending Tuesday night meeting are in for a real treat. To get the meeting underway, a covered dish supper will be held at the American Legion Home, begin ning promptly at 7:30 o’clock, fol lowed by the principal speaker’s address. It was also announced that the Gold Star Mothers of this area would be honored on this occasion. Members of both groups are cor dially invited and urged to attend the event, the spokesman assert ed. Guests in addition to Mr. San derson will be Mrs. Sanderson and Mr. and Mrs. Z. E. Merrell, all of Jacksonville. Revival Services Slated Rose Hill Baptist Church Revival services will begin at the Rose Hill Baptist Church on Mon day evening, October 31st, with the Reverend J. C. Mitchell, pastor of the First Baptist Church of Clin ton, as guest preacher. Services are to be held Monday through Sunday at 7:30 o’clock each evening and Tuesday through Saturday at 8:00 o’clock each morning. Reverend Mitchell has been pas tor of the Clinton Church since 1952, having previously served as pastor in Texas, where he received his training at the Southwestern Bap tist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth. He is a native of the west ern part of North Carolina and a graduate of Wake Forest College. The adult and youth choirs and the church quartette will present inspirational music at the evening services. An invitation to attend these ser vices is extended to the public. The Rev. Julian Motley is pastor of the church. Rev. Morris To Speak Holiness Revival Services The Reverend Hubert A. Morris of New Bern will be the guest speaker for revival services sched uled for November 4 through No vember 13 at the Wallace Pente costal Holiness Church, it was learned today from the Reverend J. Moses Thomas, pastor of the church. Services will begin at 7:30 each evening. Slogan for this series of serv ices, Reverend Thomas disclosed will be “We Must Capture The Thinking of Jesus,” with three things expecting to happen: 1— The sick are to be healed. 2— The lost are to be saved. 3— The people are to be united in the spirit of deliverance. The public is cordially invited to attend all services. Dupin Shrine Club Holds Meet Faison Wednesday The Duplin County Shrine Club held a dinner meeting in the Fai son Community Building on Wed nesday night, with wives of Fai son Nobles in charge of the meal. Following the dinner, a business session was held. It was decided to have a Ladies Night and Dance sometime in November, the date of which will be announced later. Noble Harry Kramer of Wallace, President of the Duplin County Shrine Club, presided over the meeting. As a highlight of the event, vi siting Noble Hal Tanner of Jack sonville made a short talk. One Delegate Resigned Yesterday, Another Withdrew On Account Of Illness As Hotly Contested Election Held ---1 _ i-— Revival Services Planned Wallace Baptist Church Revival services will be held at. the Wallace Baptist Church Sunday, October 30 through Sunday, Novem ber 6, with Dr. J. C. Canipe as the guest speaker. Dr. Canipe, director of Fruitland Baptist Institute, is the former Sec retary of Evangelism for North Ca rolina Baptists. He will conduct services twice daily at 8:30 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. Special music is also planned dur ing these services. The public is cordially invited to attend all the worship services. Electric Co-Op To Increase Debt Limit The Four County Electric Mem bership Corp. plans to increase its debt limit from five million to 46 million dollars. The action was approved yester day by members of the coopera tive, which serves 9,20 customers in Duplin, Sampson, Pender and Bladen counties. Some 2,000 cooperative members were told that the increase was necessary to assure future expan sion capital as needed. J. A. Ward, secretary-treasurer of the coopera tive said engineering studies show ed that by 1980 the cooperative will be serving 14,000 members. The increased debt limit, he added, will permit the cooperative to con struct its own power generating fa cilities if such a step proves feas ible. William T. Crisp, executive man ager and general counsel of Tar Heel Electric Membership Assn., said, “We are hopeful that Kerr Dam power will begin flowing to the electric cooperatives very soon.” Halloween Fete Rose Hill Begins Turkey Supper A turkey supper will highlight the activities to be held in connection with the Halloween Carnival, Fri day evening, sponsored by the Rose Hill PTA, it was announced today. Plates will be served in the school cafeteria from 5:30 until 7:30 with adult plates $1.00, children’s plates fifty cents. Following the supper ,a formal program will be presented in the school auditorium with admission 10 cents. To climax the affair, the gym will be opened following the pro gram in the auditorium for the car nival where many amusements will be offered, highlighted by a cos tume contest with the boy and girl with the best costume to be given prizes. “Everyone is invited to attend the Halloween Carnival Fridas night,” the spokesman asserted “and enjoy the many features of fered.” This is an annual PTA-sponsorec event. Harvey Arnold emerged victor ious today as the Duplin County ASC vote battle went right down to the final vote in atmosphere charged with excitement and elec tric with mounting tensions. Arnold won over Gordon Thig pen of near Lyman by 7-6. There are thirteen townships in Duplin, each being entitled to a delegate. Forces opposed to Arnold ques tioned procedure and employed ev ery parliamentary maneuver as they sought to challenge almost every move made. O. C. Burton, the Federal man from Brunswick County, presided and opened the meeting. Follow ing the calling of the roll he an nounced that all 13 delegtes were present. Pencils were then passed out. Only nine people were in the agriculture building auditorium be sides Burton and the 13 delegates when the meeting opened. Sev eral farmers and citizens stood out side in the hallway and outside the building. Burton first expressed apprecia tion to the people of Kenansville and the county for the courtesies extended him while here. He point ed out that Duplin is a rural co unty and the election is very im portant. He said that he didn't come here to straighten out the “so-called mess” but to do a job. He said the “mess exists in peo ple’s minds.” He asked the dele gates to forget the "maps” for to day and “vote according to your convictions. The people of your township expect you to vote as your township would have you to vote.” He added, “I hope that no one will get mad and walk out be cause you are the delegate from your township and will be unfair to your trust.” Burton then read out the duties of the County Committee. Before moving to a vote Billy Blanchard, the Rose Hill Township delegate, suggested that the meeting be op ened with prayer. Burton allowed him to conduct the prayer. Shortly afterwards, Steve Wilkins of Rose Hill Township entered and asked Blanchard to step outside for a minute. Burton asked if Blanchard would like the meeting held up during the conference and Blanchard replied in the affirma tive. Blanchard was a patient in James Walker Memorial Hospital for the past day or so and was there early this morning, getting out of his sick bed to be in attendance. The meeting was suspended for about ten or fifteen minutes while the conference went on outside. A1 Dan Whitfield of near Mount Olive, a spectator, questioned the proce (Continued On Page Four) Magnolia PTA To Sponsor Halloween Fete A Hallowe’en Carnival and Har vest Sale, sponsored by the Magno lia P.T.A. will be held Friday, Oc tober 28, at 7 o’clock p.m. in the school auditorium. An evening of fun and entertain ment is planned and everyone is invited to attend.__ Duplin Drivers Urged To Obey Traffic Rules --i “Make Safety have real meaning for you, observe traffic rules at all times,” said Corporal T. G. Brooks of the State, Highway Patrol today. Brooks said that a program of stricter enforcement would continue to be carried out by all patrol of ficers in Duplin County. “Driving to the right of center will come in for particular atten tion,” he cautioned. “We have re ceived orders from higher up to give the strictest enforcement pos sible to this law, violation of which has been causing an unusually large number of fatalities lately, includ ing the last one in our own coun ty.” Another violation set for stricter enforcement is “no passing when yellow line is in your lane,” he said. “Some folks are getting care less about observance of the yel low line.” Improper or the so-called “gut ted” mufflers will also receive at tention, he_saUL , "Traffic ~laws are made for ev eryone's safety and convenience. Drive like your life depends on it because it does,” he added. Duplin 4-H’ers To Attend District Meet A group of 4-H Club delegates from Duplin County leaves Satur day for the District 4-H Achieve ment Day in Fayetteville. Members going for the luncheon and afternoon program are James Brinson, Kenansville; Mary Vann Wilkins, Rose Hill; Jane Faison, Rose Hill; Louie Jones, Faison; Lorrie Currie, Kenansville; Polly James, Wallace; Melvin Williams, Pink Hill; Annette Holmes, Bow den; Carol Miller, Beulaville; W. G. Simmons, Albertson; Gerald Cherry, Mt. Olive; Shelby Batts, Magnolia; Douglas Turner, Rose Hill, and Kenneth Brock, Kenans ville. __ Wildcat Division To Hold National Reunion Concord The 81st or Wildcat Division will hold its annual National Reunion in Concord on November 11, 12 and 13th, it was made known today by a Wallace American Legion Post No. 156 spokesman. A number of men of this com munity were members of this out fit and should attend this event, the spokesman pointed out._ Warsaw Tigers Travel To Wallace Friday Night Gridiron Thriller One of the most thrilling grid iorn battles of the current season is anticipated for Friday night when the Warsaw Tigers travel to Wallace to meet the south Duplin town’s Bullodgs in the Wallace American Legion Park. Despite the fact that the Warsaw team has lost seven men during the season this year due to injur ies, feeling is running high in War saw that the Tigers will be the team to upset Wallace’s undefeat I ed conference record. 1 Coach Bill Taylor’s eleven will I go into the Friday night game with ; an entirely new backfield from the one that started the season except for quarterback Charles Braswell. The Warsaw team is in high spi rits, it was learned today, and has been practicing long and hard all week in preparation for Coach Thell Overman’s single wing Bull dogs. To date the Tigers have a 3-2-0 conference record, winning over Smithfield, Richlands, and Burgaw, to hold the third position in the conference standing lineup, witn Mt. Olive in the second slot, Wal lace holding first. The only other conference con test slated for Friday night will see a Panthers vs. Panthers strug gle as the Beulaville team meets the Mt. Olive eleven at Mt. Olive. The Warsaw Tigers are as fol lows ( with name, number, posi tion, and weight in order ): Charles Braswell, 22, QB, 168; Bobby Braswell, 37, LH, 140; Bud dy Blanchard, 25, LH, 125; Jerry Davis, 29, LT, 150; Wayne Davis, 21, RE, 175; John Godbold, 31, FB, 180; Drew Grice, 26, QB, 130; Gail Henderson, 38, LG, 135; Litch Huie, 35, RH, 140; Jay Kornegay, LG, 120; Jimmy Lanier, 34, C, 160; Deams Pollock, 27, QB, 145; H.C. Phillips, 40, LG, 140; Charles Po well, 33, LG, 105; Allen Sutton, 23, LT, 150; Walker Stevens, 20, RG, 135; Larry Taylor, RG, 140; Ronnie Torrans, 24, RH, 125; Ja mes West, 32, RE, 175; Jimmy \ (Continued On Page Twelve)